BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER: CHAOS BLEEDS ARTICLES

August 28, 2003 - With a new team taking Buffy's reigns and a need to develop the title simultaneously for three platforms, there were plenty of places where Eurocom could have gone wrong. Did they improve upon a promising beginning or squander the franchises potential?

August 7, 2003 - Scooby snacks? Erm, no, this has more to do with the Scooby Gang. Everyone's favorite vampire slayer (that would be Buffy) may be off the air, but that doesn't mean she can't show up on your TV in something other than re-runs.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Chaos Bleeds is being shipped to stores later this month, and what better way to dish out the lowdown on the game other than interviewing one of the guys in charge of it? None, hence this here video interview with Greg Goodrich, executive producer behind the game.
Douglass C. Perry, best known as Captain Insano or for his role as EIC of IGNPS2, poses the questions and Greg answers in fine detail as he sips on bottled water. Holy water? Dunno, but considering the subject matter, it's possible. Sign up today for Insider so you can check out the first part of the video interview and decide for yourself.

June 5, 2003 - Whether or not you love Buffy The Vampire Slayer TV series, the Vivendi-Universal love affair with Fox TV properties has delivered the game upon footsteps of the videogame industry with a relatively large "fwap." Microsoft heralded Buffy as an example of the system's excellent graphics, and the title came to life like few TV shows have ever on a game system. Not a huge feat in itself given the horrible slew of TV merde we've seen in the past, but Buffy, who clearly stands on her own two feet on TV, stood her ground in the videogame world too.

May 14, 2003 - There is little to argue here: Buffy the Vampire Slayer has continued to be a huge success on TV, and with each new DVD that hits retail, the slim, suburban girl who just wants to fit in during the daytime (and who fights vampires at night), is a undeniable worldwide phenomenon. Perhaps what's more interesting to gamers, however, is that on Xbox last year, Buffy didn't fall into the horribly wide gap of TV series turned games that usually all suck.